• Author/Authors

    Paavola، نويسنده , , Jouni، نويسنده ,

  • DocumentNumber
    3541339
  • Title Of Article

    Sewage pollution and institutional and technological change in the United States, 1830–1915

  • شماره ركورد
    3268
  • Latin Abstract
    This article examines institutions for water pollution control and their interaction with water supply and sanitation technologies in the United States before the First World War. The article discusses how growth of settlements polluted waters and created pressure to adopt local institutional responses and networked water supply and sewerage technologies in the mid-19th century. However, the new urban technologies undermined local institutional responses and expanded the scale of water pollution problems they were expected to resolve. Water companies, households and local governments litigated their water pollution conflicts in the courts in the absence of other alternatives. In the end of the 19th century, many states adopted water pollution policies. At first, public health authorities enforced the new policies to protect public water supplies from sewage contamination. However, when the effectiveness of filtration and chlorination of drinking water was demonstrated in the early 20th century, public health authorities ceased to enforce discharge prohibitions and instead pressured water companies to adopt the new technological measures to protect public health.
  • From Page
    2517
  • NaturalLanguageKeyword
    Water pollution , Water supply , co-evolution , water pollution policy , United States
  • JournalTitle
    Studia Iranica
  • To Page
    2524
  • To Page
    2524